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  • At the U.S. Curling Olympic Trials, a team of Gen Z curlers usurped the long-reigning champions in a big upset. Team Casper is bringing swagger, limber knees and some new sensibilities to a tradition-filled sport.
  • Once a racer for Norway, Pinheiro Braathen switched to Brazil, his mother's home country. In winning the Olympic giant slalom on Saturday, he earned South America's first medal at a Winter Games.
  • Credit Agency Downgrades Ratings on Kansas BondsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A second leading bond-rating agency has downgraded its credit rating for Kansas and cited what it calls the state's "structurally unbalanced budget" following massive personal income tax cuts. Standard & Poor's said Wednesday that it is dropping its rating for Kansas to AA from AA+. The agency also dropped its rating for bonds backed by state tax dollars. Moody's Investor Services downgraded its credit rating for Kansas in May. S&P said in its report that Kansas will probably need to cut spending in the future to offset the income tax cuts. The reductions were enacted that the urging of Republican Governor Sam Brownback to stimulate the economy. Brownback noted that the state's rating remains high and said rating agencies don't like tax cuts.===============================Brownback Seeks to Rally Kansas GOP for Fall RaceTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican Governor Sam Brownback is rallying Republican activists to promote what he says is the Kansas economic comeback after the state's primary election showed significant dissent within the GOP. Brownback and other prominent Republicans had a short rally Wednesday morning at the state GOP's headquarters in Topeka. He urged Republicans to get out and spread a message about how aggressive income tax cuts he engineered are boosting economic growth. The governor faces a tougher-than-expected re-election race with Democrat Paul Davis because of questions about whether the tax cuts are boosting growth or undermining the state's finances. Davis said Wednesday that people are worried about the governor's policies. Some are Republicans. In Tuesday's primary, Jennifer Winn, the governor's lesser-known and underfinanced opponent, received nearly 37 percent of the vote.===============================Poll: Kansas Only State with Big Uninsured JumpKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- A new Gallup poll shows Kansas is the only state in the nation to see a significant increase in its uninsured rate this year, while states that adopted parts of the Affordable Care Act have seen the largest declines. The Kansas City Star reports the adult uninsured rate in Kansas rose from 12.5 percent last year to 17.6 percent during the first half of this year, giving it the seventh-highest uninsured rate in U.S. Missouri's uninsured rate remained essentially flat, with 15.2 percent uninsured in 2013 and 15.1 percent uninsured this year. Research director Dan Witters did not offer an explanation for the growth in Kansas uninsured. A spokeswoman for the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services says the ACA was directly responsible for her state's spike.===============================GOP Governors' Group Starts Attack Ads in KansasTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Republican Governors Association is running a new TV ad in Kansas attacking Governor Sam Brownback's Democratic challenger in November's election. The 30-second spot portrays Paul Davis as a liberal tied to President Barack Obama. The ad does not mention Brownback, but the message dovetails with one of the Republican incumbent's key campaign themes. Davis spokesman Chris Pumpelly said Thursday that the ad on Topeka and Wichita stations is designed to distract voters from Brownback's record on fiscal issues. The ad notes that Davis was a delegate for Obama at the Democratic National Conventions in 2008 and 2012. Online records of television ad contracts show the RGA is spending $111,000 on time on broadcast stations over seven days. The ads started Wednesday, the day after the state's primary election.===============================Roberts, Orman Spar at Start of Kansas Senate RaceTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican U.S. Senator Pat Roberts says a northeast Kansas businessman running against him isn't truly an independent candidate but a liberal Democrat. Roberts criticized independent candidate Greg Orman on Wednesday after a short, post-primary election rally at the Kansas Republican Party's headquarters. Orman is an Olathe businessman pitching himself to voters as a centrist. He said in an interview he expected such criticism from Roberts and called it a tired attack. Roberts noted Orman's 2007 contributions to Democrat Barack Obama's presidential campaign, and his donations to Democratic congressional candidates. Also, Orman ran for U.S. Senate briefly as a Democrat in 2007 and early 2008. But Orman said he's given far more money to centrist causes. Meanwhile, Roberts will also be facing a Democrat in November, Shawnee County district attorney Chad Taylor.=============================Democrat Sees Kansas Senator Pat Roberts as VulnerableTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Democratic challenger Chad Taylor's campaign manager says that the results of the Kansas Republican primary show U.S. Senator Pat Roberts is vulnerable as he runs for re-election. Taylor campaign manager Brandon Naylor noted Wednesday that the three-term incumbent couldn't get a majority of votes in winning his GOP primary race against tea party challenger Milton Wolf. Final, unofficial results showed Roberts with 48 percent to Wolf's 41 percent. Two lesser-known candidates split the rest. Taylor is the Shawnee County district attorney and won the Democratic primary over Lawrence attorney Patrick Wiesner with 53 percent. Taylor immediately challenged Roberts to debates in each of the state's 105 counties. Roberts spokesman Leroy Towns said the senator already has agreed to a debate at the Kansas State Fair in September.=============================Jenkins Issues Debate Challenge in Kansas 2nd DistrictTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Republican congresswoman Lynn Jenkins has challenged her Democratic opponent to three debates this fall in their race in the 2nd District of eastern Kansas. Democrat Margie Wakefield's campaign said immediately Wednesday that there should be more than three. Campaign manager Mark Sump said the candidates should have what he called an actual back-and-forth on the issues. Jenkins sent Wakefield a letter Wednesday to propose debates at Topeka public television station KTWU, the Eudora Reporter and in Independence with a sponsor and venue both accept. Most of the letter touted Jenkins' work in Congress and attacked Wakefield. Sump said the campaign should be free of what he called deception and personal attacks. Jenkins is seeking her fourth, two-year term in the U.S. House. Wakefield is a Lawrence attorney.=============================LaPolice Will Not Endorse Anyone in Kansas 1st DistrictWICHITA, Kan. (AP) - The Republican challenger who lost to U.S. Rep. Tim Huelskamp says he won't endorse either candidate in the general election for the 1st District of Kansas. Alan LaPolice said Wednesday he is urging everybody to cast a ballot in November but won't pretend to think he could decide for others how to best use that vote. Huelskamp faces Democrat Jim Sherow in the general election. LaPolice, a farmer and educator from Clyde, is a political novice who garnered a surprising 45 percent of the vote Tuesday against the better-funded Huelskamp. LaPolice says he is just a small-town, former school administrator and doesn't know why people would need his endorsement.===============================Kansans' Personal Spending on Par with Neighboring StatesKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — New government figures show consumer spending in Kansas grew slightly faster than most of its closest neighbors, but average per-person spending remained lower than all but one. The report marks the government's first state-by-state breakdown of consumer spending. Nationally, the report shows a substantial shift in the economy since the recession. Kansas ranks somewhere in the middle of most categories, including how much residents have spent on housing, utilities and health care. In 2012, the latest year for which data are available, per-person spending averaged $35,498 nationally and $32,523 in Kansas. Spending rose 3.7 percent in Kansas in 2011-2012, compared with 3.6 percent in Missouri, 2.9 percent in Nebraska and 3 percent in Colorado. Of Kansas' neighbors, only Oklahoma had a higher increase at 4.2 percent.===============================Car Crashes into Northeast Kansas RestaurantOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A driver is unhurt but a 78-year-old man suffered a minor injury when a car crashed through the wall of a northeast Kansas restaurant. The accident happened Thursday afternoon at a Golden Corral in the Kansas City suburb of Olathe. Police say a 77-year-old woman was trying to park her car in front of the restaurant but hit the outside wall. The car ended up partially inside the restaurant. The 78-year-old patron sustained what police called a minor injury to his face.===============================No Injuries Reported When Building Partially CollapsesKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — No injuries were reported after a three-story brick building with a daycare facility partially collapsed in Kansas City. The Kansas City Star reports that a rear section of the building collapsed Thursday morning. Children in the daycare were safely evacuated and lined up across the street before being reunited with parents. Fire crews also evacuated a nearby building as a precaution.===============================Little Impact in Kansas from Russia Food SanctionsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas trade official says Russia's ban on U.S. food imports will hurt Russia more than it will harm Kansas farmers. The state Agriculture Department says Kansas ships more than $50 million worth of agricultural products to Russia, mostly soybeans and live breeding cattle. The department's international trade director, J.J. Jones, said Thursday that Kansas sold $15 million worth of soybeans to Russia in the first half of 2014. Sales of live breeding cattle to Russia are down because of domestic demand as U.S. ranchers rebuild their own herds. Russia buys $149 million in live cattle each year from the United States, and Kansas is one of its top three suppliers. Kansas hasn't sold beef to Russia in two years because of Russia's ban on growth additives fed to cattle.=============================Right to Farm Opponents in Missouri Weigh Recount OptionKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Opponents of Missouri's Right to Farm constitutional amendment are mulling a recount request after the measure appeared to pass by the slimmest of margins. The unofficial tally from Tuesday's election showed that Amendment 1 carried by a margin of 0.2 percent. The measure was favored in most rural counties, but opposition in the St. Louis, Kansas City, Springfield and Columbia areas was nearly enough to offset it. Missouri law allows for a recount if the victory margin is 0.5 percent or less, but the losing side must request it. The amendment declares farming a right. It is part of an effort to fortify the ag industry against animal-welfare activists and opponents of genetically modified crops, who fear the amendment will be used by corporate farms to escape unwanted regulations.=============================Missouri Highway Officials Fear Rise in FatalitiesJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri transportation officials are cautioning that the state could see a rise in traffic fatalities and bridge closures following the defeat of a proposed sales tax. State transportation commissioners held a subdued meeting Wednesday, a day after voters rejected a three-quarters cent sales tax for transportation by 59 percent of the vote. The proposal would have raised at least $540 million annually for the next decade and funded over 800 transportation projects. Without additional revenue, officials say that by 2017 they won't have enough money to adequately maintain roads and bridges. Commissioners fear traffic fatalities will go up if they can't improve rural two-lane roads that lack shoulders. They said the state could have to close some bridges if it lacks the money to repair them.=============================Thousands Without Power After Storms, Kansas City Woman MissingKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Utility companies in the Kansas City area worked throughout the night to restore power to thousands of customers after a storm packing heavy rain and strong winds moved through the state. Kansas City Power & Light reported 1,575 customers were without power early Thursday in its service area in the Kansas City metropolitan area, down from more than 6,000 Wednesday night. The storm dumped more than 3 inches of rain in parts of northwest Missouri, including Kansas City and Warrensburg. Emergency workers are searching for a woman who might have fallen into a river in Kansas City during the heavy rainfall. Police say a man reported seeing a woman going into the Blue River Wednesday night during the rain. Firefighters and police searched the area until about 10:30 pm, when the effort was called off because of darkness and the high water in the river. The search was resuming Thursday morning.=============================Kansas Primary Election Tests Dual Voting SystemWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas primary elections tested a dual voting system that counts votes for federal offices cast by people who registered using a federal form without proving their citizenship. It's unclear how many of those registrants actually voted Tuesday. But the Sedgwick County election office said Wednesday that a "quick check" of 1,100 provisional ballots did not reveal any names matching those on its list of federal registration applicants. Secretary of State Kris Kobach has instructed counties to give provisional ballots to voters who registered on the national form without documentation of citizenship. That potentially affects 172 voters across 16 counties, including 85 in Sedgwick County. Election officials were told to count only their votes for federal races.=============================Pittsburg to Decide on Accepting Grant for TrailPITTSBURG, Kan. (AP) - Pittsburg officials will decide next week if they will accept a state transportation department grant worth more than $650,000 to build a proposed trail that has drawn opposition. The Joplin Globe reportsthe trail would also be funded by about $250,000 in private donations. Some homeowners who live near the trail's planned location oppose the project. The Pittsburg City Commission will decide Tuesday whether it will take the $656,000 grant. A Kansas transportation department official says it would be rare if the city declined it. Pittsburg was one of 20 chosen for it. The transportation department said it received $50 million worth of requests for grants from the transportation alternatives program. The department has about $11 million in available funding for that program.===============================Monsoon Season Helps Ease Drought in Southwest: Southern Plains Still ParchedDENVER (AP) — A generous monsoon season has helped ease drought conditions in Colorado and the Southwest but parts of the hard-hit southern plains still have a long way to go. The U.S. Drought Monitor released Thursday said that between 2 and 6 inches of rain fell in storms last week across the plains of Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas and Texas, which have been stuck in a drought for nearly four years. However, report author Brad Rippey says they'll need extended rain and snowfall to make up for the 20 to 30 inches of moisture they've lost during that time. Rangeland and pasture in New Mexico and Arizona and are still fairly dry but conditions have improved. While all of Colorado was in some stage of drought a year ago, now just 40 percent is.=============================Hutchinson Salt Museum Seeks Higher AttendanceHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) - Officials with a salt museum in Hutchinson admit attendance hasn't been as high as expected but they say they are always looking for new ways to draw people in. The museum, called Strataca, has averaged about 55,000 visitors a year since it opened in May 2007. Director of Operations Gayle Farrell says annual attendance has not been increasing as much as museum officials hoped, but specific events are popular. The Hutchinson News reportsthe museum has been out of debt since early 2011. The only outside support it receives is 5 percent of a local quarter-percent sales tax, which is about $100,000 per year.=============================Sentencing Delayed for Kansan in Brother's DeathSALINA, Kan. (AP) - An 18-year-old Kansas man will be sentenced in September for the shooting death of his young stepbrother at their home. Ryan Velez was scheduled to be sentenced Wednesday for second-degree murder after he shot 9-year-old Kaden Harper in June 2010. The sentencing was delayed at the request of Velez's attorney, who said he needed more time to review records from Larned State Hospital. Velez has been at Larned since 2011 after pleading guilty to unintentional but reckless second-degree murder. He was 14 when he shot Kaden at their rural Assaria home. Prosecutors say the boys were arguing over doing chores. The Salina Journal reports Velez will now be sentenced on September 22.=============================5 Kansans Accused of Money Laundering at CasinoKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) - Five Kansas residents are accused of trafficking in marijuana and laundering the profits through slot machines at a Kansas City, Kansas casino. U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom says a federal indictment handed down on Wednesday alleges the defendants laundered more than $200,000 in cash by depositing the money into slot machines and then cashing out without playing. The investigation began after the Kansas Racing and Gaming Commission contacted the Kansas Bureau of Investigation about suspicious activity at Hollywood Casino. Prosecutors say the defendants were seen depositing large amounts of money in small denominations into the machines, cashing out and redeeming ticket vouchers without making wagers. An attorney for the lead defendant, 30-year-old Gregory Rapp of Gardner, was not available for comment Wednesday afternoon. No attorneys were listed for the other four.=============================New Wichita Airport Terminal to Open in 2015WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - Wichita's new airport terminal is on schedule to open next spring. Airport officials say construction began on the new building in October 2012 and the building is three-fourths complete. Jim Armour, the terminal's resident engineer, told members of the Wichita Airport Authority this week that the site is expected to be finished by March 31, 2015. The Wichita Eagle reports the airport's name will also then change from Wichita Mid-Continent Airport to the Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport. When the new terminal opens, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and Southwest will each lease two gates, and Allegiant Airlines will lease one. An additional three gates will give the airport room to grow.=============================Police: $100,000 Worth of Copper Stolen in WichitaWICHITA, Kan. (AP) - Wichita police say thieves have stripped $100,000 worth of copper wire and piping from a former grocery store. Police said Wednesday the theft was discovered Tuesday at a now-closed Dillons store in the southern part of the city. Capt. Doug Nolte says damages to the building will likely cost more than the copper. He says the thieves cut holes throughout the building. Nolte says they appeared to be working inside it for a long period of time. Nolte says police are working with evidence found at the scene to track down the thieves.=============================Kansas School District to Return FundsCHEROKEE, Kan. (AP) - A clerical error is causing some funding questions for a southeast Kansas school district. Southeast USD 247, with schools in Cherokee and Weir, will have to return money from a four-mill capital outlay that was used in the 2013-14 school year. The error also means the district cannot spend the funds for the upcoming school year. The Pittsburg Morning-Sun reports that the district was authorized in September 2012 to renew its annual collection of four mills in capital improvement funds for the next five years. However, the board's resolution was not certified because of a clerical error. This year, the board proposed increasing the capital outlay from four to eight mills. The error in the original proposal was found when a resident sought records related to the proposed increase.===============================Kansas City Schools Get Provisional AccreditationJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri education officials have granted provisional accreditation to the Kansas City School District. The unanimous vote Wednesday by the State Board of Education means that Kansas City schools no longer will be labeled as unaccredited when classes start next week. That will remove the option for some students to transfer to other nearby schools at the expense of the Kansas City district. Kansas City schools had been unaccredited since January 2013. State education officials said Kansas City students have shown some improvement academically but that many still failed to score as "proficient" on Missouri's standardized tests. State board officials said it will be a challenge for Kansas City schools to maintain their new provisional status over the next year. Kansas City schools Superintendent Stephen Green said it can take a while for students scoring below grade level to improve their status, but he believes the district's scores can continue to get better.==============================Baseball Fan from South Korea Gets "Royal" TreatmentKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A South Korean who has been communicating with Kansas City baseball fans online during games for years is getting the royal treatment in his first visit to the city. The Kansas City Star reports that Sung Woo Lee of Seoul has been a Royals fan since the 1990s and watches as many games as he can, despite a 14-hour time difference from Kansas City. He was welcomed at Kansas City International Airport on Tuesday by a group of fans who have set up an itinerary that includes five Royals games, including one on Monday at which he will throw out the first pitch before Royals play the Oakland A's. He's also slated to attend Thursday's Kansas City Chiefs game and travel to Arkansas to see the team's Class AA affiliate, the Northwest Arkansas Naturals.===============================4 Shot in Wichita ApartmentWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ Police in Wichita are investigating the shootings of four men inside an apartment early Thursday. KWCH-TV reports that all four were shot multiple times. A 25-year-old man suffered what police called life-threatening wounds to his chest and legs. The shootings broke out around 4 am at an apartment complex in the northeastern part of Wichita. Police would not say if they had identified the shooter or a likely motive.===============================Weis Knows Jayhawks Need Wins to Prove ProgressLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) _ Charlie Weis is entering the third year of a five-year contract at Kansas and he knows better than anyone that the University of Kansas Jayhawks need to start winning games in a hurry. The longtime Big 12 doormat won just once in his first season and three times last year, including a conference victory over West Virginia. But for Weis to feel good about the progress that has been made, it may take going at least .500 for the first time since 2008. Weis took the drama out of the biggest question in the spring when he appointed sophomore quarterback Montell Cozart the starter. But there are plenty of question marks elsewhere on the two-deep, especially with another influx of junior college prospects. KU opens its season September 6 against Southeast Missouri State.===============================Jackson County Jury Splits Verdict in Church CaseKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Jackson County, Missouri jury has returned a split verdict in a lawsuit accusing a pastor who's also a past president of the Missouri State Board of Education of sexual exploitation. The Kansas City Star reports the jury ruled Thursday that the Reverend Stan Archie's Christian Fellowship Baptist Church has to pay a former staffer and her husband $350,000 for misrepresenting that a 2007 church investigation of her abuse allegations was aimed at learning the truth. Jurors rejected claims alleging that Archie and the church had defrauded the staffer by misrepresenting Archie as a "safe and competent" counselor. The jury declined to consider punitive damages. Lawyers for the couple, who were not identified, had been seeking $1.5 million. Archie resigned as Missouri State Board of Education president in January 2013.
  • Wolf Missed Paying Kansas Income Taxes in 2000TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A spokesman for U.S. Senate challenger Milton Wolf has acknowledged he initially failed to pay Kansas income taxes in 2000, resulting in a state warrant before the bill was paid off. Incumbent U.S. Senator Pat Roberts's campaign raised the issue in a campaign mailer this week, just days before Tuesday's primary. Wolf campaign spokesman Ben Hartman on Friday said Wolf failed to pay $2,135 in taxes because he was working for his uncle's medical products company in Texas, and it didn't withhold taxes after Wolf moved to Kansas. A warrant to pay the bill was issued in 2002, and Hartman said Wolf and his wife took extra jobs to pay it off in 2003. Hartman says attention to the case shows Roberts is desperate. Roberts spokesman Leroy Towns said voters should know.=============================Jenkins Faces Tea Party Challenger in Kansas 2ndOTTAWA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas congresswoman Lynn Jenkins faces a Republican primary tea party challenger who accuses her voting to allow the indefinite detention of American citizens. Joshua Joel Tucker, of Pittsburg, also said Friday that the House's GOP leaders aren't doing enough to challenge Democratic President Barack Obama. Jenkins is seeking her fourth, two-year term representing the 2nd District of eastern Kansas. The primary is Tuesday, and the winner will face Democrat and Lawrence attorney Margie Wakefield in the November election. The congresswoman defends her vote for 2011 legislation authorizing the military detention of terrorism suspects, saying Tucker and other critics are wrong in contending it allows U.S. citizens to be held indefinitely. Campaign manager Lee Modesitt says Jenkins is working hard to make sure Kansans' voices are heard.==============================PAC Says Kansas Farmers Funding Huelskamp AttacksWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A political action committee that has spent more than $260,000 on ads criticizing Kansas congressman Tim Huelskamp says all the money is coming from concerned Kansas farmers. Now or Never spokesman Tyler Harber said in an emailed statement Friday that no Washington lobbyists or special interest groups have been involved in its efforts in the state's 1st Congressional District. The Republican congressman faces a primary challenge Tuesday from Clyde farmer Alan LaPolice. Huelskamp said Friday he has written to the U.S. House clerk requesting an investigation of the PAC. He wants it prosecuted for using the House seal on a flier criticizing him for being removed from the House Agriculture Committee. The PAC says Huelskamp's complaint shows his disconnection from Kansas voters and the needs of his constituents.==============================K ansas Revenues in July Beat Expectations by $1.6MTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas collected $1.6 million more in taxes than anticipated in July, breaking a streak of monthly shortfalls in collections. The Department of Revenue reported Thursday the state took in almost $409 million in taxes in July, when the state's official fiscal forecast predicted revenues of $407 million. The July surplus was only four-tenths of 1 percent, but it was a sharp break from collections in April, May and June, which fell a total of $334 million short of expectations. Those shortfalls sparked an intense debate about whether the state underestimated the effects of personal income tax cuts enacted at Republican Governor Sam Brownback's urging in 2012 and 2013. Brownback's administration said the shortfalls were due to investors reacting to uncertainty about federal tax policies.==============================Kobach Predicts 22% Turnout in Kansas PrimaryTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The top election official in Kansas is predicting 22 percent of registered voters will participate in next week's primary election. Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach says of the more than 1.7 million registered Kansas voters, he expects more than 381,000 will cast ballots in the August 5 primary. Kobach says turnout was about 23.2 percent in the state's 2012 primary. Kobach says the predicted turnout for next week is based on recent primary voting history, early voting totals in the current primary and lack of a statewide get-out-the-vote operation. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that voter turnout in Wichita and other areas of the 4th Congressional District could approach 27 percent because of the contest between U.S. Representative Mike Pompeo and Republican challenger Todd Tiahrt.===============================Brownback Names 3 to Kansas Board of RegentsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Governor Sam Brownback has named a former Kansas House member and two attorneys to the board overseeing the state's higher education system. Brownback on Friday announced the appointments of former state Representative Bill Feuerborn of Garnett, Joseph Bain of Goodland and Zoe Forrester Newton of Sedan to the Board of Regents. Feuerborn served in the House from 1995 through 2002. The three will serve through June 2018. Their appointments require state Senate confirmation. The nine-member board oversees state universities, community colleges and technical colleges. The state spends almost $2.6 billion annually on higher education. The terms of three regents expired at the end of June. They were Mildred Edwards of Wichita, former state Senate Majority Leader Tim Emert of Independence and former state Rep. Ed McKechnie of Arcadia.===============================Kansas Supreme Court Upholds Hollister Murder ConvictionTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court has upheld the murder conviction of a man who died while serving time for the 2009 death of a woman. The court on Friday ruled on the conviction of Roger Hollister, who died in 2013 at the El Dorado Correctional Facility where he was serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole. He was 61. Hollister was convicted in the death of 58-year-old Patricia Kimmi of rural Horton. She disappeared in November 2009 and her remains were found in May 2010. The Supreme Court ruled that although the death of a criminal defendant does not end the appeals process, it found evidence in the case was convincing enough to find Hollister guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.===============================KBI Completes Investigation into McPherson DeathMCPHERSON, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Bureau of Investigation has completed its report into the death of a 56-year-old Kanopolis man shot by McPherson police. The McPherson Sentinel reports the KBI was looking into the June 4 death of Timothy Lloyd, who was unarmed when police say he charged at an officer. Authorities said when officers were called to investigate a hit-and-run accident in the central Kansas community, the suspect vehicle was gone. Officers eventually found Lloyd. Police say he charged at one officer, who fired several shots. Lloyd was pronounced dead at a McPherson hospital. The KBI's report has been sent to McPherson County Attorney David Page, who says he's waiting for more evidence before making a decision on the case.===============================Emporia Woman Convicted of Misusing FundsEMPORIA, Kan. (AP) — A 56-year-old Emporia woman accused of misusing money that belonged to her 93-year-old mother-in-law has been convicted of mistreating a dependent adult. The office of the Kansas attorney general said in a release that Dalene Miller also was found guilty Thursday of conspiring to mistreat a dependent adult. Her trial in Lyon County lasted four days. The attorney general says Miller was accused of misusing her mother-in-law's money of her mother-in-law from 2011 to 2012 while Miller was acting as the older woman's trustee. Miller was accused of buying a house, farm and a truck while her mother-in-law's expenses went unpaid. Sentencing is scheduled for September 26.=============================== Report: Midwest Economic Index Slumped in JulyOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A monthly economic survey index for nine Midwestern and Plains states has slumped after hitting a three-year high a month earlier. A report issued Friday says the overall Mid-America Business Conditions Index dropped more than 3½ percentage points in July, to 57.0. The index had risen slightly in June, to 60.6. Looking six months ahead, the business confidence portion of the overall index also declined. It hit 60.0 last month, compared with 63.6 in June. The survey results from supply managers are compiled into a collection of indexes ranging from zero to 100. Survey organizers at Creighton University say any score above 50 suggests economic growth, while a score below that suggests decline. The survey covers Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.===============================Kansas Church Leaders Question Kobach Comment on Voter IDWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Some Kansas church leaders are upset over a remark by Secretary of State Kris Kobach concerning the state's voter photo identification law. Kobach said during an interview on Topeka radio station WIBW this week he didn't know of any churches that oppose the voter ID law. He told The Wichita Eaglesome individual pastors disagree with the law, but to say entire churches are against it he would put the word "church" in quotation marks. Some local pastors question whether the secretary of state has talked to any black churches. Carieta Cain Grizzel, pastor at Grant Chapel African-American Episcopal Church in Wichita, says the African Methodist Episcopal Church objects to voter ID laws in all states.==============================Democrat Self-Funding Bid for US Senate in KansasTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Democratic candidate Patrick Wiesner is running for the U.S. Senate in Kansas almost completely on his own dime. Wiesner is a Lawrence attorney, and a finance report filed by his campaign shows that he's made $48,000 in personal loans to his campaign. He's also contributed another $2,000 to his bid. He's reported only $601 in other contributions. Through July 16, he spent about $37,000. Wiesner also ran for the U.S. Senate in 2010, receiving 10 percent of the vote in the primary that year. In Tuesday's primary, Wiesner faces Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor. Taylor has raised about $141,000 for his campaign since entering the race in November, including about $13,500 since the beginning of July. His campaign reported spending more than $123,000 through July 16.==============================Fluoride Question on November Ballot in SalinaSALINA, Kan. (AP) — Voters in central Kansas will decide in November whether to allow their community to continue adding fluoride to the local water supply after a petition received enough signatures to bring the issue to a vote. Saline County Clerk Don Merriman confirmed Thursday there were enough verified signatures to put the question of whether to rescind Salina's water fluoridation ordinance on the ballot. The petition was presented by Salina Cares, an organization concerned about the risks of fluoride in the public water supply. Supporters say the issue isn't as much about whether fluoride in the water is healthy as it is about giving residents the freedom to choose what substances they put into their bodies. The city has been adding fluoride to the water since 1968.===============================Girl, 13, Found Stabbed to Death in Saline CountySALINA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a 13-year-old girl has been found stabbed to death at a home in central Kansas. Saline County Sheriff Glen Kochanowski told The Salina Journal that the girl was found stabbed to death at a home in northwest Saline County early Friday. He says officers were notified about 1:45 am and found the girl's body when they arrived. They identified the victim as Galazia Niehaus. Kochanowski says the Kansas Bureau of Investigation is helping the sheriff's office with the investigation. He declined to say if a suspect is in custody.===============================Official: Leavenworth Police Didn't Violate LawLEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — The Leavenworth County attorney says police officers who shot at a suspect who had abducted a 5-year-old girl did not violate any laws. The Kansas City Star reports that County Attorney Todd Thompson didn't say Friday if it was police gunfire that hit the child, who died in the July 18 incident. Authorities haven't said how the child died. Authorities have said two officers fired at the suspect, Marcas McGowan, after he led police on a chase with the child, Cadence Harris, and pointed a gun at police. McGowan is charged with felony murder and other charges in the child's death. The charges allege McGowan is responsible for the death because it occurred while he was fleeing police and endangering a child. McGowan's next court hearing is September 10.==============================Suspect Named in Death of Lawrence WomanLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have identified a Topeka jail inmate as a suspect in the weekend killing of a 56-year-old Lawrence woman. Christine Kaplan was found dead Saturday at her home. An autopsy determined the death was a homicide, but the cause has not been made public. Police said Thursday that 38-year-old Angelica Marie Kulp, of Lawrence, is charged in an arrest warrant with first-degree murder. Investigators located and interviewed Kulp at the Shawnee County Jail, where The Topeka Capital-Journal reports she was booked late Wednesday on unrelated charges of theft and burglary. Lawrence police Sergeant Trent McKinley says Kulp was acquainted with Kaplan and may have stayed at her home. Neighbors have said Kaplan was known to take in people who needed a place to stay.==============================Prosecutor: Foster Dad in Hot Car Death Was HighWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Prosecutors say a Kansas foster father was high on marijuana when he left a 10-month-old girl in a hot car, where she died. The details of the case surfaced during a bond hearing Friday for Seth Jackson. He's charged with first-degree murder in the July 24 death. Police say the girl was in the sweltering car for more than two hours in Wichita, where temperatures were 90 degrees. KWCH reported that Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett cited the marijuana use in court as the reason for raising Jackson's bond to $250,000. Bennett told the court Jackson had gone to his drug dealer's house and bought marijuana. Prosecutors believe he then intended to smoke marijuana. But they have said there's nothing to indicate the girl's death was intentional.==============================Elderly Dog That Walked 30 Miles Back Home AdoptedSEDAN, Kan. (AP) — An aging Labrador Retriever who walked 30 miles back to a Kansas family that didn't want her has found a home with an heiress in Florida. Kelsey Loyd, with the Chautauqua County Animal Shelter in southern Kansas, says the dog, named Lady, was adopted twice, but the first family said the old dog didn't get along with other pets. A second family adopted her 30 miles away, but Lady escaped and walked back to her previous home. KWCH-TV reports that Lady's life changed recently when Helen Rich saw her story on Facebook. Rich is an heiress to the Wrigley gum company fortune and owns an animal shelter in Florida. She sent an assistant to Kansas in a private jet to pick up Lady. The dog arrived in Tampa late Thursday. ==============================Topeka Police Work to Reduce Calls from ApartmentsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Topeka police want to reduce the high volume of calls from a downtown apartment complex that residents have nicknamed the "Green Monster." The Topeka Capital-Journal reportsThursday that law enforcement has been meeting with the owner of St. Gregory Suites. The green-painted complex accounted for 628 calls for police or fire service last year. That dwarfed the next highest complex, where people made 236 calls. Topeka Police Maj. Kris Kramer says the apartments are a drain on resources. He says calls include homicides, dog complaints and people getting stuck in elevators. Kramer says the types of calls aren't unique, but the volume is. A new apartment manager says he's working to evict troublesome tenants and install security cameras.===========================Kansas City Bus Riders Get Free Wi-FiKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Bus riders in Kansas City now have access to free Wi-Fi. The Kansas City Star reports the free Internet connection is offered at the 47th Street Transit Center. The newspaper on Thursday reported that the center is the first in the metropolitan area to offer free Wi-Fi. Local officials say Sprint has agreed to provide the service at no cost for at least a year. The commitment will be re-evaluated at a later date. The Kansas City Area Transportation Authority previously announced free Wi-Fi on all Max busses and 22 other Metro buses. =============================Police: Kansas Man Recovering After Train AccidentLENEXA, Kan. (AP) — Police say a Kansas man is OK after being struck by a train. KMBC-TV reports the man was hit Thursday evening in Lenexa. Authorities have not released his name. Police spokesman Dan Friesen says the man was taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. Friesen called the collision an accident. It's unclear what type of train was involved or how the man was hit.==============================Nearly $640K for Topeka Inmate EducationTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is getting nearly $640,000 in federal funds for a technical training program for inmates at the Topeka Correctional Facility. The Justice Department grant was awarded to the Kansas Department of Commerce. The Kansas agency says the grant will fund Certified Production Training courses at Washburn Institute of Technology. The department says the classes work to prepare inmates for jobs when they're released from prison. The Commerce Department says it's working with the state Department of Corrections and Washburn University in administering the grant.==============================Kansas Banks Warn of Credit Card ScamATCHISON, Kan. (AP) — Bank officials and police in northeast Kansas are cautioning citizens about what appears to be a credit card scam. Atchison Police Chief Mike Wilson tells radio station KAIR the scam has appeared numerous times recently in that city and in neighboring Brown County. Authorities say bank customers receive a recorded phone call saying their credit card has been deactivated. The recording tells customers they can reactivate the card by providing the 16-digit card number, the PIN number and, in some cases, their Social Security number. Wilson says that such scams can be very hard to investigate. He says the calls usually originate outside the area, possibly from a foreign country. The chief advises hanging up immediately on any such call.===============================County Weighs Mandatory Electronics RecyclingPRATT, Kan. (AP) — Officials in a south-central Kansas county are considering whether to require mandatory recycling of old computers and other electronic devices. The Pratt Tribune reports that the Pratt County landfill is approaching its daily 20-ton capacity, with up to 17 tons a day being dumped there. The County Commission this week discussed whether residents should have to take so-called "e-waste" to the county's recycling center, as an alternative to expanding the landfill. Pratt County residents already have the option of leaving electronics at the recycling center without charge. Commissioners noted that it's more convenient for residents to haul all items to the landfill. But Commissioner Gina Borho says even if there's never 100 percent compliance with a recycling rule, it's still worth trying.==============================Auburn Seeks More Than $200,000 in LawsuitAUBURN, Kan. (AP) — The city of Auburn has filed a civil lawsuit against a former city clerk who pleaded guilty to a federal embezzlement charge. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Auburn is seeking more than $200,000 in its civil lawsuit against 61-year-old Alice Riley. Riley pleaded guilty Tuesday to the federal charge and is scheduled to be sentenced October 17. Federal prosecutors said Riley embezzled at least $186,000 from Auburn, where she managed payroll and other accounts as the city clerk for several years. In the civil lawsuit filed July 23 in Shawnee County District Court and served to her Tuesday, the city of Auburn is seeking $196,000, as well as reimbursement in excess of $20,000 for the cost of investigation to determine the amount of the theft.==============================Moritz Takes Oath to Join Federal Appeals CourtTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Former Kansas Supreme Court Justice Nancy Moritz has formally joined the federal appeals court that handles cases from six western and Plains states. U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren administered the oath of office to Moritz on Wednesday in Topeka. The Denver-based 10th Circuit Court of Appeals says in a news release that Moritz's temporary chambers will be in Lawrence. President Barack Obama nominated Moritz in August 2013. Her nomination was confirmed by the Senate in May. Moritz will fill the vacancy created in 2011 when Judge Deanell Tacha, a Kansan, retired and became dean of the law school at Pepperdine University in Malibu, California. Her departure gives conservative Republican Governor Sam Brownback his first appointment to the state's highest court.==============================Kansas Tank Maker Plans ExpansionPARSONS, Kan. (AP) _ A southeast Kansas company that makes storage tanks for customers worldwide is planning a major expansion. The Parsons Sun reports that Tank Connection is adding equipment and employees to expand production by 50 percent. The Parsons-based firm was established 10 years ago with two employees. The addition of 35 workers will bring total employment to more than 400. Tank Connection manufactures shop-welded, field-welded and hybrid storage tanks as well as aluminum dome covers. The company has two plants in Parsons and one each in Baxter Springs, Oswego and Galesburg. Company president Bill Neighbors most of the new equipment will be installed at the Galesburg plant. A third shift will be added there and at the Parsons facilities.==============================Suspect Charged in Triple-Fatality CrashWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ Bond is set at $500,000 for a Wichita man charged in a hit-and-run crash that killed three people. KAKE-TV reports 31-year-old Juan Gandara-Rodel made his first appearance Thursday in Sedgwick County District Court. He's charged with three counts of second-degree murder or three alternative counts of involuntary manslaughter, plus aggravated battery and leaving the scene of an accident. The collision happened around 2 am Sunday in west Wichita. Police say Gandara-Rodel was speeding in an SUV when he ran a red light and struck a car. The collision killed three passengers in the car, identified as 21-year-old Emily Phillips, of McPherson, and Jake Hallacy and Zachery Taylor, both 26 and from Valley Center. The driver and a fourth passenger were injured. Gandara-Rodel did not have a lawyer Thursday.==============================Kansas City Bans Open Carry of FirearmsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City councilmembers have unanimously voted to ban people from openly carrying firearms within city limits. Mayor Sly James has advocated for the prohibition that was voted on Thursday. He says the city doesn't need any more weapons on the streets. The ban takes effect in 10 days. It's unclear how long it will last. The Missouri General Assembly approved a bill prohibiting such bans for permit holders in May. Missouri Governor Jay Nixon vetoed the bill, but an override session is set for September 10.
  • Kansas Senator Says President Must Strike SyriaLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — U.S. Senator Pat Roberts says he doubts the United States can avoid a military strike in Syria following reports that its government used chemical weapons in the civil war there. But the Kansas Republican also said Tuesday that President Barack Obama should address the nation and get the consent of Congress for military action. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Roberts told a Lawrence Chamber of Commerce luncheon he believes Congress would authorize military action by the Democratic administration. Roberts said military action needs to be forceful enough to tip the balance of fighting against Syrian President Bashar Assad's forces. The Kansas senator said he doesn't "see any way out of" using military force, but he acknowledged that Americans are war-weary after conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.=================Former Legislator Weighs Entering Race for KS Secretary of StateWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Former Republican state senatorJean Schodorf is considering a run for Kansas secretary of state next year as a Democrat. The Wichita Eagle reports that Schodorf said she's studying whether a challenge to Republican Secretary of State Kris Kobach would be viable. The Wichita resident became a Democrat in January and said party members recently encouraged her to run. Schodorf was a moderate Republican who served 12 years in the Senate before conservatives successfully targeted her for defeat in the 2012 GOP primary. She has said she regretted her 2011 vote for Kobach's legislation requiring new voters to provide proof of their U.S. citizenship when registering. Mission Hills businessman Randy Rolston already has filed to run for the Democratic nomination. Kobach said any Democratic candidate will want to dismantle the photo-ID law.=================KS AG Office Says New Roofer Law Requires OutreachTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Attorney General's office plans to do more outreach before pursuing fines under a new state law aimed at cutting down on roofing fraud. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the law, which requires roofers to register, took effect July 1. Adrian Serene, an assistant attorney general in the Consumer Protection Division, says the agency has received only about 380 applications out of an estimated 700 roofing contractors in Kansas. Serene says his office believes most of the roofers who haven't yet applied are unaware of the new law and not trying to evade it. He says the office will continue contacting roofers to educate them about the new law. The state's relying on the $250 registration fees to fund the staff needed to oversee the new program.=================UPDATE: Clear Channel Lifts Ban on Wichita Women's Clinic Ad WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Media conglomerate Clear Channel is lifting its earlier ban on radio ads from a Wichita abortion clinic promoting health care services for women. The company reversed course Tuesday as supporters of the South Wind Women's Center prepared to deliver a petition with 68,000 signatures Wednesday, asking the broadcaster to reconsider its earlier decision. Clear Channel says it recognizes certain advertising may stir passionate viewpoints but that it determined it should use its best judgment to accept and run ads that don't violate the law or FCC standards. The company says the nationwide petition did not play into its decision. South Wind is the first abortion clinic to open in Wichita since the 2009 slaying of Dr. George Tiller.=================Cargill to Invest $48M in Dodge City Meatpacking PlantDODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — Cargill Beef says it will spend $48 million to install an automated order distribution system at its Dodge City meatpacking plant. The Wichita-based company said Tuesday the system will be housed in a specially built 62,000-square-foot facility. Construction is to begin late this year, with the new system expected to be in operation by the spring of 2015. Cargill says in a news release the automated system will improve the flow of highly perishable fresh meat products to hundreds of destinations. The company says the system will be capable of holding about 155,000 boxes of beef, compared with a current capacity of about 25,000 boxes. The Dodge City plant opened in 1979 and processes about 6,000 head of cattle per day.=================Governor Revises Kansas Drought Emergency DeclarationTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The recent spate of rainy weather has prompted Governor Sam Brownback to revise the drought declaration in parts of Kansas. Brownback said Monday that 23 of the state's 105 counties are no longer considered in drought conditions. It marks the first time since July 2012 that conditions have improved enough to remove counties from the drought designation. Brownback's office says Kansas Water Office director Tracy Streeter recommended that 20 counties be moved into drought emergency status, 25 move to watch status and 37 remain in emergency status. Emergency status allows counties to draw water from certain state fishing lakes. Emergency hay and grazing are also allowed in those counties.=================Report: Warmer Temperatures Helping Kansas CropsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Hot, windy conditions over the past week have helped dry out rain-sodden fields across Kansas. The National Agricultural Statistics Service says Kansas farmers were able to catch up on haying and to spray herbicide to prepare fields for planting wheat. Most crops also benefited from the warmer temperatures. The agency's weekly update Monday said 1 percent of the corn is mature. Its condition is rated as 28 percent poor to very poor, 32 percent fair, 34 percent good and 6 percent excellent. Most of the sorghum crop is now heading. The sorghum's condition is rated 14 percent poor to very poor, 32 percent fair, 46 percent good and 8 percent excellent. Soybean condition was 10 percent poor to very poor, 30 percent fair, 51 percent good and 9 percent excellent.=================Kansas Seeks to Improve High School Graduation RatesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas has recently joined 30 other states in enrolling students in a federally funded program aimed at raising high school graduation rates and helping students prepare for college and careers. Education Commissioner Diane DeBacker says the Kansas State Department of Education had been hoping for several years to introduce the program, called Jobs for America's Graduates, but didn't have the funds until this year. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the program targets students who might be at risk of dropping out of school, offering them extra mentoring and support. The Kansas Department for Children and Families secured the $3.6 million federal grant this year to launch the program.================= Animal Drug Company Moves to KCKKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — An animal pharmaceutical company based in the state of Washington has moved its headquarters to Kansas City, Kansas. The company, Stason Animal Health, says it has leased space in the Biological & Technology Center on the University of Kansas Medical Center campus. Stason is in the early stages of developing drugs for companion animals. It was based in Vancouver, Washington. Initially, only CEO Diana Wood will be located at the headquarters. Wood says the company chose Kansas City, Kansas to take advantage of the area's growing animal health industry. The Kansas City Star reports that the move was publicly announced Monday.=================Sprint Eliminating 800 Customer Service JobsNEW YORK (AP) _ Sprint says it's eliminating about 800 customer service jobs because fewer people are calling its centers. With growth in other parts of the business, Sprint says it expects the company's work force to remain at about 40,000. Sprint said Tuesday that most of the affected workers were notified last Thursday. Others will be told next month after Sprint figures out which additional positions will be cut. The company says the cuts are at various locations across the country. Sprint's headquarters are in Overland Park. Last month, Japanese investment firm SoftBank Corporation completed a $21.6 billion investment in Sprint, giving it a 78 percent stake in the third-largest U.S. wireless carrier. Sprint says its efforts to increase customer satisfaction helped to reduce the number of calls for customer service.=================Hill City Woman Cited for Trespassing at ShelterHILL CITY, Kan. (AP) — A 71-year-old Hill City woman has been charged with trespassing for entering the city animal shelter to care for dogs she felt weren't being treated properly. The Hays Daily News reports Melissa Scott pleaded guilty recently to trespassing at the city dog pound, where she said the dogs didn't have proper shelter from the sun and lacked water. She went into the fenced-in area, which is located at the city wastewater plant, sprayed down the dogs and held up blankets and boards to block the sun. Scott appeared in municipal court and pleaded guilty to trespassing. She says she now plans to present the issue to the city council. Hill City Police Chief Russ Ingle says the dogs aren't mistreated, have 5-gallon water pans and are in shaded pens.=================Missouri AG Sues Walgreens, Claims OverchargingST. LOUIS (AP) — Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster is suing The Walgreen Company, accusing the nation's largest pharmacy chain of overcharging customers and using deceptive advertising. Koster filed the lawsuit Tuesday in Kansas City and announced details at a news conference in St. Louis. Koster says his office made undercover visits to stores in St. Louis, Kansas City, Springfield, Jefferson City and Osage Beach in June and July. He says investigators found the stores often charged more at checkout than displays indicated. He says that of 205 products purchased, 43 had price discrepancies, ranging from a few cents to $15. Walgreens spokesman Jim Graham declined to comment and said the Chicago-based company hasn't seen the lawsuit. The suit seeks an injunction that would force The Walgreen Company to stop the alleged deceptive practices.=================Defendant Will Be Retried in 1997 Rape CaseLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A man who was convicted in the 1997 rape of a University of Kansas student will go on trial again next January. Forty-year-old Robert Grey originally was sentenced in 2009 to 26 years in prison for rape. Prosecutors said he kidnapped a 20-year-old woman at gunpoint from a campus parking lot, took her to a secluded area and raped her. The Kansas Court of Appeals last year awarded Grey a new trial, finding that prosecutor Amy McGowan did not disclose some evidence to the defense. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that McGowan was assigned to other duties earlier this year after the Kansas Supreme Court found she committed errors in several trials from 2007 to 2009. A Douglas County judge last week scheduled Grey's new trial for January 13.=================Dozens Displaced by Wichita Apartment Fire WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities in Wichita say a three-alarm fire at an apartment building caused about $1.75 million in damage. The fire broke out around 5:30 am Tuesday at an apartment complex in the southeastern part of the city. Five people were treated for smoke inhalation, and the Red Cross opened a shelter to help some of the roughly 70 people who were displaced. Crews brought the flames under control by early afternoon but remained on the scene, dousing the roof to prevent flare-ups. Wichita Fire Chief Ron Blackwell told KWCH-TV that the fire started on the second floor of one building in the complex. A nearby building was also damaged. The damage estimate includes about $1.5 million to the building and $250,000 to the contents.=================Ex-KU Student Sentenced to Probation in AssaultLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A former University of Kansas student has been placed on 18 months of probation in the sexual assault of a 19-year-old female student at a dormitory. Jeremy R. Ruzas was sentenced Monday after he pleaded no contest in July to aggravated battery. He was arrested on February after a female student reported Ruzas assaulted her in her room at Oliver Hall dormitory room. Prosecutors say Ruzas, who had been drinking, entered the woman's room uninvited and assaulted her. Ruzas was originally charged with aggravated sexual battery and burglary. Ruzas left the university after he was charged. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Douglas County District Judge Sally Pokorny suspended an eight-month prison sentence because Ruzas had no criminal history. He could be sent to prison if he violates probation.=================Lawrence Man Wins Air Guitar's Top TitleLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A Lawrence man has riffed and thrashed his way past 16 other contestants from Europe and Japan to win the world air guitar championship. Eric Melin is known as Mean Melin on the air guitar circuit, where contestants pretend to be playing a guitar. He became the newest World Air Guitar Champion in Finland on Friday. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Melin came in second at the U.S. Air Guitar finals in Los Angeles, which meant he hadn't qualified to compete at the World Air Guitar Championships in Finland. But in the air guitar competition world, there's a Dark Horse round, which Melin won. Then he went to Finland and won. Melin says he had been planning to hang up his virtual guitar, but now he'll keep strumming. (For more information, listen to KPR's story on Eric Melin and the U.S. Air Guitar Championships.) =================Manning Lawyer Gives More Details on Client's Gender ChangePROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — An attorney for Army Private Chelsea Manning, who was previously known as Bradley Manning, says the soldier decided to announce that she wanted to live as a woman the day after sentencing because a military prison said publicly it would not provide hormone treatment. Attorney David Coombs told The Associated Press on Monday that Manning wanted the media attention over the court-martial to dissipate before making the announcement. But Manning decided to go ahead with it after a Courthouse News Service story quoted a military prison spokeswoman saying hormone treatment would not be allowed. The story was published the day before the soldier was sentenced to 35 years in prison. Coombs says he hopes the military prison will allow the treatment and eliminate any need to sue in military or civilian court.=================Cosmosphere Adds Webcam Feed of Apollo Conservation WorkHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Cosmosphere has launched a website with a live webcam where viewers can track conservation work on the engines that powered NASA's Apollo moon mission. The Hutchinson museum said Monday it recently got confirmation that a serial number on a thrust chamber recovered from the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean shows the F-1 engine came from the Apollo 11 mission. Most of the more than 25,000 pounds of engine pieces are in tanks to remove corrosion. Some pieces are cleaned by hand. The Apollo F-1 conservation project was commissioned by Bezos Expeditions.=================MO Man Dies in Motorcycle Accident Near LawrenceLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Douglas County authorities say a Missouri man died from injuries he suffered in a motorcycle accident near Lawrence. Douglas County Sheriff's Lieutenant Steve Lewis says 61-year-old Randall Lusk of El Dorado Springs, Missouri, died early Tuesday. He was injured Monday night in an accident on Kansas 59 just south of Baldwin City. Lewis says deputies responding to reports of a motorcycle in the median found Lusk seriously injured. He was flown by air ambulance to an Overland Park hospital. 6News Lawrence reports that authorities are asking for anyone who was in the area of the accident to call the Douglas County Sheriff's office.=================Hays Area House Fire Injures 3HAYS, Kan. (AP) — Three people have been injured in a house fire in the Hays area. The Hays Daily News reports that the fire destroyed the two-story home Monday. Ellis County Rural Fire Chief Dick Klaus says three people were taken to the hospital by ambulance, but he didn't know the extent of their injuries. He says the house was fully engulfed in flames when fire crews arrived. Klaus says when the residents realized the home was on fire they escaped through bedroom windows, onto the roof of a porch. He says they had to jump off the porch roof to escape the blaze. An investigator from the State Fire Marshal's office is investigating the cause of the fire, which started in the kitchen.=================Developer Planning New Kansas City Downtown HotelKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Tennessee developer is planning the first new hotel building in downtown Kansas City since 1985. Chartwell Hospitality LLC officials said Monday the company will break ground next year on a 257-room hotel in the Crossroads Arts District. The 10-story building would house a Marriott Courtyard and a Residence Inn. The Kansas City Star reports that the developer will not seek city tax incentives for the project. The cost of the hotel project was not disclosed, but company officials said it would be entirely privately financed. The 190,000-square-foot hotel is expected to be completed by fall 2015. Several hotels have opened downtown since 2000 but they are all in existing buildings that were renovated. Chartwell is based in Franklin, Tennessee and owns about 30 hotels nationwide.=================John Gilligan Dies: Former Ohio Governor, Father of Ex-KS Gov Kathleen SebeliusCINCINNATI (AP) — Former Ohio Governor and U.S. Representative John Gilligan, a liberal Democrat who won creation of the Ohio state income tax, has died. He was 92. His death Monday was confirmed by caregiver Frank Kennedy. Gilligan's daughter is Kathleen Sebelius, a former Kansas governor and current Health and Human Services secretary under President Barack Obama.=================K-State Researchers Worried About Aquifer's FutureWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Researchers at Kansas State University say that the High Plains Aquifer could be in deep trouble by the year 2060. Scientists say the natural processes that replenish the aquifer are only making up for about 15 percent of the water being pumped out. If pumping continues at the current rate, the aquifer could be drawn down to less than two-thirds the level it maintained in the 1950s, before the advent of center-pivot irrigation. But experts say that saving water now could prolong the aquifer's life for roughly another hundred years. The researchers' findings were published Monday in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. It focuses on the Ogallala aquifer in western Kansas.=================Ex-Police Officer Admits Part in Kansas Bribery CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A former Wichita police officer has admitted to conspiring to bribe a car-theft victim in hopes of saving her job. Thirty-four-year-old ex-officer Joletta Vallejo pleaded guilty in federal court Monday to conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Her 40-year-old co-defendant, Patrick Melendrez, also pleaded guilty. Sentencing for both was set for November 18th. Prosecutors agreed as part of the plea deal to recommend probation. Vallejo admitted failing to follow procedures in responding to citizens' reports, then lying to investigators about it. She was accused of arranging last August for Melendrez to pay the theft victim $150 to recant his statement about her actions and another $150 if she kept her job with the Police Department. A third defendant in the case faces a status hearing September 9th.================= Wichita Woman Sought in Lighter Fluid IncidentWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police are looking for a woman involved in a domestic dispute that nearly ended with a man being set on fire. The Wichita Eagle reports officers were called to a home Sunday afternoon about an incident involving a 55-year-old man and his 39-year-old common-law wife. Police say an argument escalated with the woman spraying lighter fluid on the man and trying to ignite it. But she was unsuccessful in starting a fire, and left the scene by the time police arrived. Authorities said they don't know what the two were arguing about.================= Kansas Man to Be Tried in Ex-Girlfriend's DeathCOLBY, Kan. (AP) — A 24-year-old Kansas man has been bound over for trial in the February killing of his ex-girlfriend, who was found stabbed to death in her burning home. The Colby Free Press reports a Thomas County judge on Monday found enough evidence to try William Shank on charges of first-degree murder, aggravated arson and burglary. Shank is charged with killing 27-year-old Teri Morris, who worked at a Walmart in Colby and as an emergency medical technician. A coroner's report said Morris had been stabbed 27 times before her Colby home was torched. Authorities said the two were contesting custody of their 8-month-old daughter. The baby was with Shank when he later called police from a home in Logan. Shank, who has lived in Garden City and Colby, pleaded not guilty Monday.================Who's Faster? Chiefs' Charles or Royals' Dyson? KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The challenge has been laid down. All that's separating Royals outfielder Jarrod Dyson and Chiefs running back Jamaal Charles from deciding the fastest man in Kansas City sports is about 300 yards of parking lot between Kauffman Stadium and Arrowhead Stadium. Of course, the folks in charge of their teams are likely to stand in the way, too. The match race is unlikely to ever happen in the metro area that produced former 100-meter world-record holder Maurice Greene. There's too much injury risk to line them up just for fun. It's a compelling conversation piece, though. Dyson has swiped 25 bases in just 60 games this season, and said "I'm not afraid of nobody." Charles is the former junior Olympian who said, "If he wants to put on a show, I'm never going to back down from anyone."================Kansas Clinic Pushes Back on Clear Channel Ad BanWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Supporters of a new abortion clinic in Wichita are pushing back after media company Clear Channel rejected radio ads promoting its health care services for women. Representatives of the South Wind Women's Center plan to deliver a petition Wednesday containing more than 68,000 signatures urging Clear Channel to reconsider last month's decision to pull ads from three of the four stations it operates in the Wichita market. Clear Channel officials refused to immediately comment on the matter. South Wind's executive director, Julie Burkhart, is expected to speak at Wednesday's event. The clinic opened in April in the building once owned by slain abortion provider George Tiller. It offers reproductive health care services, including abortions and subsidized birth control for low-income patients.**this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • NPR's Scott Simon ponders skyrocketing Tooth Fairy payouts.
  • Patrick Mahomes of the Kansas City Chiefs was named the Associated Press 2022 NFL Most Valuable Player, easily outdistancing his Super Bowl rival, the Philadelphia Eagles' Jalen Hurts.
  • One of the biggest record, CD and audio equipment sales in the Midwest begins this Friday in Lawrence. The event, called "For Your Ears Only," is an annual fundraiser for the Audio-Reader Network at the University of Kansas. Audio-Reader is a radio reading service for the blind and print-disabled. For the past 12 months, the reading service has been collecting thousands of donated items: vintage records, CDs, radios, turntables, speakers and other audio equipment. KPR's J. Schafer spoke to one of the organizers, Feloniz (fell-uh-NEEZ) Lovato-Winston about this year's sale.That's Feloniz (fell-uh-NEEZ) Lovato-Winston, who works for Audio-Reader. She was speaking with KPR's J. Schafer. The big audio sale -- "For Your Ears Only" -- runs from 6pm to 9pm Friday at the Douglas County Fairgrounds. It continues Saturday from 9am to 2pm. For more information, log on to Audio Reader's website: www.reader.ku.edu. That's reader - DOT - ku - DOT- edu.
  • Kansas Public Radio ended its spring membership drive with $376,000 in listener pledges, surpassing the typical spring goal of $280,000.
  • Todays Headlines as compiled from the Associated Press
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